The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 7, 1979-Page 9 West may need fuel from Comnunists, stu AP Photo !MILITARY VEHICLES tried to clear traffic-clogged roads near Paris yesterday, as the worst winter storm in years virtually isolated the French capital. Paris isolated as worst snow in years devastates Europe By UPI and Reuter On the 12th day of Christmas yesterday, Europe's worst winter storm in 15 years spread to the Mediterranean. Meanwhile, about 3,000 troops worked with police to clear roads after Paris was threatened with virtual isolation by ice and snow. PARISIANS WERE advised to stay home over the weekend, and weathermen predicted freezing tem- peratures and more snow in parts of the country until Wednesday. Northern France and roads leading south from the capital have been worst hit by the current cold snap. Main roads south of Paris had been almost cleared of eight inches of snow, but some roads southwest of Paris still were closed to all but emergency traffic. ON THE FRENCH Riveria, the town of Cannes swit- ched off the Christmas lights to save power for heating. It even snowed in the balmy Canary Islands. At least 141 deaths have been blamed on the severe weather that has blanketed the continent with snow and kept temperatures below freezing since New Year's Eve. After day-long snowfalls Friday, large tracts of France were still snowbound with scores of roads still blocked and highways littered with thousands of abandoned vehicles. AN ITINERANT French peddler found frozen to death in his truck and a Normany farmer who died after aban- doning his car to walk home were among the latest fatalities in the big freeze-up. Three other persons died in traffic accidents in Italy's icy roads and three children died in a fire in Hungary when they were left alone in a house where a faulty stove had been pressed into service to keep out the cold. UNITED NATIONS (AP)-A report by scholars from the United States, Japan, and West Germany says capitalist countries eventually will have to ask communist nations to help solve the world's energy problems. The report also says Western leaders, and especially President Carter, should do more to drive home the idea that the energy problem is serious. IT CONTENDS the United States should keep pushing for a Middle East peace and stay on good terms with Saudi Arabia to head off a repeat of the oil embargo on "friends of Israel" in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war-which led to the quadrupling of oil prices by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The 92-page report was prepared for the Trilateral Commission, a five-year- old policy-study group of about 250 leading citizens from Japan, North America, and Western Europe. Jimmy Carter was a member before he became president. The commission says the views in the report are those of the writers-John Sawhill, president of New York Univer- sity and former U.S. energy chief; Keichi Oshima, nuclear engineering professor at the University of Tokyo; and Hanns Maull, a West German who is European secretary of the com- mission. Titled "Energy: Managing the Tran- sition," the report discusses how the world can be assured of enough energy LUXO% PUTS THE LIGHT WHERE YOU WANT IT And Ulrich's offers a large selection- all at 15% off. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University during a gradual shift to higher-cost popwer by the late 1980s or the 1990s. "ANY GLOBAL approach to energy issues must eventually involve the communist countries," the report says. Although the U.S. Central Intelligen- ce Agency forecasts moderate Soviet and East European consumption of im-' ported oil in the near future, the report says, "clearly it would ease the world supply-and-demand situation if the U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe were-as a group-to remain a net exporter. "The Trilateral governments should, therefore, consider the advisability of providing capital and technical. assistance, particularly in offshore drilling, to the Soviets as part of an overall energy agreement. "SUCH AN arrangement might speed the development of such areas in the dy says Bering Sea where the possibility of large reserves exists and where the lack of the latest drilling technology may be slowing down the drilling program." The report calls on the Western nations and Japan to develop a stronger energy policy-a strategy mixing national programs and international initiatives. "No significant improvement will be possible," it says, "until the average citizen in these countries is aware of the threat to his or her security and welfare, and the security and welfare of allied countries, that could accompany energy supply interruptions of sharp price increases." AMAZING NEW CANCER OPERAT.ION The doctor doesn't cut out anything. You cut out cigarettes. This simple surgery is the surest way to save you from lung cancer. And the American Cancer Society will help you perform it. We have free clinics to help you quit smoking. So, before you smoke another cigarette, call the A.C.S. of fice nearest you. And don't put it off. The longer you keep smoking, the sooner it can kill you. AMERICAN SOCIETY ~ THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY [HE PUBLISER AS A PUBLIC SERVICE. II Photos of sex victim found with Chicago murder suspect s effects CHICAGO (UPI) - Color photographs of an unwilling sex victim - one of dozens of young men police say were drugged by John Wayne Gacy -; have been recovered from the suspected mass-sex slayer's home, in- vestigators said yesterday. Two , color Polaroid prints of Robert Sipusich, 23, were found among Gacy's possessions, police said. One showed the young man sprawled across Gacy's bed, nude and unconscious. SIPUSICH TOLD police Gacy lured him to his modest ranch-style home in Norwood Park Township four months ago with the offer of drugs, then chloroformed him and sexually at- tacked him. , Gacy, 36, has told police he killed 32 young men and boys after having sex with them. He said he buried 27 bodies ip his dirt crawl space and dumped five others in the Des Plaines River, after his makeshift graveyard became too crowded to accomodate more bodies. Twenty-nine recovered bodies have been linked to Gacy, but he has only been charged with one murder - that of Robert Piest, 15, of Des Plaines. PIEST'S 13ODY has yet to be found but investigators said they have discovered the first evidence linking Gacy to Piest. A down jacket belonging to Piest was recovered from under- neath Gacy's laundry room - exactly where Gacy told investigators he hid it. Piest disappeared the day he was to have seen Gacy about a part-time job with Gacy's construction company - one of many lures police said Gacy used to get young men and boys to his home. Another was the promise of drugs. Investigators said Gacy, who was originally picked up on marijuana charges, may have had access to many different kinds of drugs because he remodeled many drug stores. IT APPEARS Sipusich was a victim of that ploy. He told investigators he met Gacy in a Northwest Side lounge last fall and Gacy offered him am- phetamines. Gacy said they would have to go to his home to pick up the drugs - only part of Gacy's extensive private collection that he bragged about, Sipusich said. Within an hour, Sipusich said he was overpowered and chloroformed into oblivion. Sipusich said he screamed when he first regained consciousness and saw Gacy on top of him. "I tried to get up. Then he brought that rag again and I passed out," Sipusich said. He said he came to at dawn and jum- ped from the bed and screamed at Gacy, who then "started talking about this problem - he liked men as much as women." ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 1946 NOTORIOUS American Agent is assigned to push convicted Nazi's daughter (whom he's fallen in love with) into bed with old friend of her father's in Rio. They're after Hitchcock's "Mac Guffin"-Uranium-which looked suspicious enough to the FBI to put Hitch under surveillance. Including "longest kiss" in screen history. MON: Keaton in THE BLACKSMITH, COPS. 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